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debm55

(51,770 posts)
Tue Oct 14, 2025, 11:59 AM Oct 14

What is your favorite genre of book? Mine are mysteries. And you?

Last edited Tue Oct 14, 2025, 12:53 PM - Edit history (1)

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What is your favorite genre of book? Mine are mysteries. And you? (Original Post) debm55 Oct 14 OP
Mystery/Thriller OLDMDDEM Oct 14 #1
Thank you very much, OLDMDDEM. debm55 Oct 14 #6
I would have to say biographies. Mad_Dem_X Oct 14 #2
Thank you very much Mad_Dem_X. I also enjoy reading historical biographies. debm55 Oct 14 #8
I fell in love with Sherlock Holmes at the age of 12 from reading "Study in Scarlet" Coventina Oct 14 #3
HAHAHHAHAHAH. Thank you very much, Coventina debm55 Oct 14 #9
Cozy mysteries written with lots of humor and animals integral to the story. SheltieLover Oct 14 #4
OMG! I love cozies!!! Do you have a favorite series? Coventina Oct 14 #5
Great choice, SheltieLover. Great choice. debm55 Oct 14 #10
Sci/Fi, Fantasy, Action adventure, spooky stories (King & Koontz) historicall novels, biographies. lark Oct 14 #7
Thank you, lark. Excellent choices. debm55 Oct 14 #12
Mystery is my favorite genre. MIButterfly Oct 14 #11
Thank you very much MIButterfly. Wonderful choices. debm55 Oct 14 #13
This message was self-deleted by its author lark Oct 14 #14
Historical novels madamesilverspurs Oct 14 #15
Thank you very much, madamesilverspurs. Those are great choices. Thank you for sharing. debm55 Oct 14 #16
"Herman Wouk's Winds of War and War and Remembrance are compelling." 3catwoman3 Oct 14 #29
Excellent choices, 3 catwoman3, I too like to read the book before seeing the movie to see castong changes and what was debm55 Oct 14 #37
Nonfiction, earth sciences and meterology, history catbyte Oct 14 #17
HAHAHA, Thank you very much, catbyte. I married a science geek. debm55 Oct 14 #23
it varies, but I've mostly been reading history and biographies lately mike_c Oct 14 #18
Thank you very much, mike_c. Great choices of books. debm55 Oct 14 #24
Same here peacebuzzard Oct 14 #28
I'm especially interested in 20th century world history mike_c Oct 14 #34
Agree, with you peacebuzzard. And in this point in time, it will only get worse. debm55 Oct 14 #38
Science fiction/ Fantasy WmChris Oct 14 #19
Wonderful, WmChris. Thank you for sharing. debm55 Oct 14 #25
Include me in with the mystery crowd. Polly Hennessey Oct 14 #20
Wow, You really love to read. Thank you, Polly Hennessey for all your current selections. debm55 Oct 14 #30
True crime and then mysteries. sinkingfeeling Oct 14 #21
Thank you very much sinkingfeeling. I have been watching true crime on my tablet. debm55 Oct 14 #31
Mysteries but not the gore and macho man type. efhmc Oct 14 #22
Agree with you efhmc. I not into gore books and movies. debm55 Oct 14 #39
Non fiction. Cultural histories. applegrove Oct 14 #26
Wonderful choices, applegrove. debm55 Oct 14 #40
Horror exboyfil Oct 14 #27
Very interesting. Thank you so much, exboyfil, for sharing with us. debm55 Oct 14 #33
It depends entirely on what I'm in the mood for, and that varies a lot. 3catwoman3 Oct 14 #32
Agree 3catwoman3. I used to like scary books in my younger days. I agree with rereading books, especially mysteries as debm55 Oct 14 #41
Rock Star & Band Bios ProfessorGAC Oct 14 #35
Thank you very much, ProfessorGAC. It sounds very interesting. debm55 Oct 14 #36
Sci-Fi, Action adventure, Spies dickthegrouch Oct 14 #42
Great choice of reading books and variety of selections. Thank you very much, dickthegrouch. debm55 Oct 14 #43
Mysteries, Thrillers, and Science Fiction LogDog75 Oct 14 #44
Thank you very much, LogDog75. I have read all the books in the Outlanders series. It is set in Scotland and characters debm55 Oct 14 #47
Sci-fi/Bio's/History-n/t marked50 Oct 14 #45
Thank you very much for sharing. marked50 debm55 Oct 14 #46
Mysteries, yes some_of_us_are_sane Oct 14 #48
Thank you very much, some_of _us_are_sane. debm55 Oct 14 #49
Mysteries MustLoveBeagles Oct 14 #50
Thank you very much, MustLoveBeagles. debm55 Oct 14 #51
I mostly enjoy historical non-fiction JoseBalow Oct 14 #52
Thank you very much, JoseBalow, for sharing your books with us. debm55 Oct 14 #53
Non fiction choie Oct 14 #54
Excellent.choice.Thank you for sharing. debm55 Oct 14 #55
Thanks for asking! choie Oct 14 #57
Mysteries/thrillers. Scandinavian noir. Biographies. History. Diamond_Dog Oct 14 #56
Thank you very much, Diamond_Dog. wonderful. debm55 Oct 14 #61
I enjoy a good mystery... Trueblue Texan Oct 14 #58
Thank you, Trueblue Texan. I sometimes read historical fiction. debm55 Oct 14 #62
Historical fiction.... Based on some history with some enhanced story telling. Norrrm Oct 14 #59
Thank you very much,Norrm. Great selection. debm55 Oct 14 #60
Science fiction. Morbius Oct 15 #63
Thank you very much, Morbius. You have a wide variety of books. Yes, for the History. debm55 Oct 15 #68
Cozy Mysteries wendyb-NC Oct 15 #64
Thank you very much, wendyb-NC. Thank you for your unique selection of books. debm55 Oct 15 #67
Mostly ART BOOKS... GReedDiamond Oct 15 #65
Thank you very much, GReedDiamond. Wonderful genre of books. debm55 Oct 15 #66
Various Sciene Fiction. Maigical Realism... electric_blue68 Friday #69
Excellent selections, thank you very much, electric_blue68 debm55 Friday #71
Anything by John Grisham. Emile Friday #70
Terrific. Thank you Emile. debm55 Friday #72

Mad_Dem_X

(10,051 posts)
2. I would have to say biographies.
Tue Oct 14, 2025, 12:17 PM
Oct 14

Although I do read fiction (mostly Stephen King), I am fascinated by other people's life stories.

Coventina

(28,834 posts)
3. I fell in love with Sherlock Holmes at the age of 12 from reading "Study in Scarlet"
Tue Oct 14, 2025, 12:29 PM
Oct 14

I've had a fixation on tall, thin, brainy, emotionally unavailable men ever since.

I love mysteries too!!

SheltieLover

(74,609 posts)
4. Cozy mysteries written with lots of humor and animals integral to the story.
Tue Oct 14, 2025, 12:32 PM
Oct 14

A hint of the paranormal is always good, too.

Coventina

(28,834 posts)
5. OMG! I love cozies!!! Do you have a favorite series?
Tue Oct 14, 2025, 12:35 PM
Oct 14

My all time favorite might be Cadfael, but I also like a lot of the "witchy" ones.

On edit: should have included the "Miss Silver" series, that really introduced me to the genre.

lark

(25,580 posts)
7. Sci/Fi, Fantasy, Action adventure, spooky stories (King & Koontz) historicall novels, biographies.
Tue Oct 14, 2025, 12:36 PM
Oct 14

I love to read and read almost anything. I read every day. I also like political books like Sen. Frankens books occasionally.

MIButterfly

(1,524 posts)
11. Mystery is my favorite genre.
Tue Oct 14, 2025, 12:41 PM
Oct 14

I also like biographies and political books (from the left, of course!).

Response to debm55 (Original post)

madamesilverspurs

(16,410 posts)
15. Historical novels
Tue Oct 14, 2025, 12:46 PM
Oct 14

Just about anything by James Michener (currently re-reading The Source, timely). Also, Herman Wouk's Winds of War and War and Remembrance are compelling.

Back in the early '90s when I was essentially bed-bound for months, a friend brought a box of books he'd purchased at a yard sale. It was a series about the country's westward expansion, and each book was named after a state. In one of the books the author wrote about a family's journey in a covered wagon, wherein one of the children riding in the back begged her father to stop the wagon so she could get out and claim the prairie dog puppy that was running after them. Ye gods.

.

3catwoman3

(27,978 posts)
29. "Herman Wouk's Winds of War and War and Remembrance are compelling."
Tue Oct 14, 2025, 02:22 PM
Oct 14

Indeed they are. I learned way more about WW II from those books than I ever did from any history class.

I thought Robert Mitchum and Polly Bergen were woefully miscast as Pug and Rhoda Henry in the TV miniseries. Wouk made mention so often of Pug being short and stocky, and Rhoda being taller than her husband that Mitchum and Bergen just did not fit the visual. I think Carroll O'Connor would have been good in that role.

debm55

(51,770 posts)
37. Excellent choices, 3 catwoman3, I too like to read the book before seeing the movie to see castong changes and what was
Tue Oct 14, 2025, 03:37 PM
Oct 14

done to the book,

peacebuzzard

(5,695 posts)
28. Same here
Tue Oct 14, 2025, 01:57 PM
Oct 14

especially historical characters of the New World. It is fascinating, terrifying and real and surreal how we actually came to this point in time.

mike_c

(36,810 posts)
34. I'm especially interested in 20th century world history
Tue Oct 14, 2025, 02:37 PM
Oct 14

I lived through half of it, but wasn't paying much attention, lol. There's so much to learn about how we got here!

Polly Hennessey

(8,279 posts)
20. Include me in with the mystery crowd.
Tue Oct 14, 2025, 01:07 PM
Oct 14

I love Cozies. Usually read them at bedtime. Right now I am reading Vicki Delaney and one of her Sherlock Book store mysteries with Gemma as the lead. I am in love with David Rosenfelt and his Andy Carpenter character along with his beloved Golden Retriever, Tara. Next on my bedside table is Flop Dead Gorgeous.

For daytime reading now it is Michael Connelly’s, The Waiting with Bosch and Ballard.

Also, reading Henry V by Dan Jones. One of my favorite kings. The other being Richard III. 📖📚📚

exboyfil

(18,310 posts)
27. Horror
Tue Oct 14, 2025, 01:52 PM
Oct 14

Used to be Science Fiction. Some Fantasy.

My preference anymore is for standalone books and not series. I got a real taste for Day 1 scenarios (often this is horror SF like zombie outbreak, alien invasion, kaiju, etc).

I prefer true monsters and not human monsters.

3catwoman3

(27,978 posts)
32. It depends entirely on what I'm in the mood for, and that varies a lot.
Tue Oct 14, 2025, 02:35 PM
Oct 14

Sometimes mystery or true crime. I like most of John Grisham's legal stuff. Sometimes lightweight chick lit/romances. Historical fiction. Biographies.

Not much into horror/scary stuff. Never read any Stephen King and probably never will.

Also. I am a re-reader. I'm a pretty fast reader, and if there's a story I've really enjoyed, I always find some details I didn't recall or notice in the first read thru.

I know a lot of people think re-reading a book is a waste of time because, "You already know what happened." My counter to this is that most people have no problem seeing a favorite movie more than once, or listening to a favorite song again and again and again. Why should it be different with books? Some authors are such superb wordsmiths that I just really enjoy re-experiencing the skillful way they put words together. It's like the words feel good rolling around in my brain.

debm55

(51,770 posts)
41. Agree 3catwoman3. I used to like scary books in my younger days. I agree with rereading books, especially mysteries as
Tue Oct 14, 2025, 03:47 PM
Oct 14

there might have been things that I missed.

ProfessorGAC

(74,896 posts)
35. Rock Star & Band Bios
Tue Oct 14, 2025, 03:09 PM
Oct 14

Just a couple months ago, I finished a book on Glynn John's, the legendary producer. Enjoyed it greatly.

dickthegrouch

(4,135 posts)
42. Sci-Fi, Action adventure, Spies
Tue Oct 14, 2025, 04:05 PM
Oct 14

With an emphasis on the scientific aspect.

I've thoroughly enjoyed the "Ell Donsai" and Laurence Dahners' other series.

David Collins' "The Artifact" series.

Skyler Ramirez "The Worst..." series.

Nathan Lowell's recent series, while fiction, reveal some of the development and implementation issues surrounding rapid adoption of new technologies, which are very real to this career-diagnoser of why new tech sometimes fails. His "Traders tales from the Golden Age of the Solar Clipper" series are perfect for any teen starting out in Sci-Fi.

I've never understood why people lump Sci-Fi and fantasy together. I couldn't care less about fairies, unicorns, or other BS I've encountered in the very few fantasy novels I've mistakenly started.

I'm not fond of endless wars either. Give me more realistic Sci-Fi, such as the authors mentioned above, and I'm really happy.

debm55

(51,770 posts)
43. Great choice of reading books and variety of selections. Thank you very much, dickthegrouch.
Tue Oct 14, 2025, 04:10 PM
Oct 14

LogDog75

(937 posts)
44. Mysteries, Thrillers, and Science Fiction
Tue Oct 14, 2025, 05:05 PM
Oct 14

I like reading novel series where you follow the main characters through different stories. Authors like John Sandford, James Patterson, Lee Child, Douglas Preston& Lincoln Child, C.J. Box, and Michael Connelly.

I like the older science fiction writers like Issac Armstrong, Ray Bradury, and Ben Bova.

debm55

(51,770 posts)
47. Thank you very much, LogDog75. I have read all the books in the Outlanders series. It is set in Scotland and characters
Tue Oct 14, 2025, 08:24 PM
Oct 14

pass through stones to a different time. Waiting on the last book--number 10 in the series.

Norrrm

(3,211 posts)
59. Historical fiction.... Based on some history with some enhanced story telling.
Tue Oct 14, 2025, 10:15 PM
Oct 14

The Source by James Michener.
Master and Commander.
Shaka Zulu
Shogun

Just a few examples out of many.

Morbius

(747 posts)
63. Science fiction.
Wed Oct 15, 2025, 12:04 AM
Oct 15

I was never a huge fan of fantasy but I absolutely love the Discworld books by Terry Pratchett.

I like book series in sci/fi, like The Expanse series (S.A. Corey) and the Honorverse & Safehold (David Weber). Fun to read, like popcorn in binders. I also am a fan of history, especially lately.

debm55

(51,770 posts)
68. Thank you very much, Morbius. You have a wide variety of books. Yes, for the History.
Wed Oct 15, 2025, 12:14 PM
Oct 15

wendyb-NC

(4,499 posts)
64. Cozy Mysteries
Wed Oct 15, 2025, 01:02 AM
Oct 15

I like other genres, of course, such as non-fiction, biography, science, historical fiction, and history. I like fast-paced thrillers, but less lately.

GReedDiamond

(5,486 posts)
65. Mostly ART BOOKS...
Wed Oct 15, 2025, 03:00 AM
Oct 15

...books about art history, artist biographies (especially Marcel Duchamp), art movements, such as dada/surrealism and pop-art, plus the contemporary(?) "art movement" pop-surrealism, if that's still a thing, cuz its been around for like 30 years.

Mark Ryden being a great example of that.







electric_blue68

(24,476 posts)
69. Various Sciene Fiction. Maigical Realism...
Fri Oct 17, 2025, 12:13 AM
Friday

I read many of the greats Clark, Asimov, Bradbury, Simak, Sturgeon. Then the "New Wave" came along in the ?70's - read more short storiy anthologies than novels. 80's David Brin's Uplift Universe, Lost track of novels in the 90's onward till about ?2018 try to read more re ebooks/library (not too successfully yet). Oh I kept looking at the SF section at B&N (until a yr or two before covid) through all that time. So there's authors I know of '90s+ but not read. Competing interests with modest $ was an issue (still is, even more so)
Actually I just remembered I had started checking out SF anthologies from the library in 2017+ then waylaid by covid.
.
Haven't read the Latin authors that made the Magical Realism more known?
Read Forever by Pete Hamill, and Shoeless Joe Jackson (just finished) but the movie Field of Dreams (a favorite!) is considered MR which I saw in the movie thearter.

I might be interested in some Historical Fiction. I read an SF 2nd of 2 novels by Connie Willis - about WWII London which was SF bc there were time traveling historians visiting the period.
I just recently finished Kindred by Octavia Butler. A 1976 early 20's Black woman is repeatedly pulled back into slavery time in ?Virginia.

Re SF Maybe I should look up Best SF novels of the 90's, the 00s etc

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